Some judges and scholars have questioned the social value of the standard form in which the Securities and Exchange Commission settles its corporate enforcement actions, including the agency’s use of essentially unreviewed consent decrees that include no admission of liability or wrongdoing. This essay for a symposium on SEC enforcement provides an analysis of the deterrent effects of the three main components of settlements in public enforcement of law: liability, admission, and remedy. The conclusions are the following. All three components have beneficial deterrent effects. Cost considerations nonetheless justify some settlements that dispense with liability or admission, or even both. But a practice like the SEC’s of uniformly instituti...
This Article examines the overlap between SEC securities enforcement actions and private securities ...
Civil damages liability for securities law periodic disclosure violations has come under attack, par...
This paper develops a model of law enforcement in which the indicted and the enforcer can negotiate ...
Some judges and scholars have questioned the social value of the standard form in which the Securiti...
Inadequate civil regulatory liability can be an incentive for public enforcers to pursue criminal ca...
The securities class action cannot be justified in terms of compensation, but only in terms of deter...
For four decades, the SEC’s often-invoked policy of settling cases without requiring admissions of w...
The U.S. system has relied heavily on antitrust class actions as a means of ensuring compensation an...
Throughout its existence, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has allowed defendants...
Cox discusses the linkage between private litigation and the deterrence of corporate misconduct
Antitrust has a complex set of criminal and civil remedies enforced by a multiplicity of public and ...
Securities class actions impose enormous penalties, but they achieve little compensation and only li...
When thieves are required to repay the money they stole, are they being punished? Or is the repaymen...
This Article offers an alternative analysis of the doctrine articulated by the Supreme Court in Dott...
This entry for the forthcoming The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (Second Edition) surveys the...
This Article examines the overlap between SEC securities enforcement actions and private securities ...
Civil damages liability for securities law periodic disclosure violations has come under attack, par...
This paper develops a model of law enforcement in which the indicted and the enforcer can negotiate ...
Some judges and scholars have questioned the social value of the standard form in which the Securiti...
Inadequate civil regulatory liability can be an incentive for public enforcers to pursue criminal ca...
The securities class action cannot be justified in terms of compensation, but only in terms of deter...
For four decades, the SEC’s often-invoked policy of settling cases without requiring admissions of w...
The U.S. system has relied heavily on antitrust class actions as a means of ensuring compensation an...
Throughout its existence, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) has allowed defendants...
Cox discusses the linkage between private litigation and the deterrence of corporate misconduct
Antitrust has a complex set of criminal and civil remedies enforced by a multiplicity of public and ...
Securities class actions impose enormous penalties, but they achieve little compensation and only li...
When thieves are required to repay the money they stole, are they being punished? Or is the repaymen...
This Article offers an alternative analysis of the doctrine articulated by the Supreme Court in Dott...
This entry for the forthcoming The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (Second Edition) surveys the...
This Article examines the overlap between SEC securities enforcement actions and private securities ...
Civil damages liability for securities law periodic disclosure violations has come under attack, par...
This paper develops a model of law enforcement in which the indicted and the enforcer can negotiate ...